Chewing Gum for Weight Loss

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This is a randomized controlled trial of the effects of chewing gum on body weight. The investigators will randomly assign 200 overweight or mildly obese adults to one of two groups. Participants must be otherwise healthy and ages 19-50. The control group will receive only printed information on optimal diet and increasing physical activity. The intervention group will be instructed to chew gum following meals and in place of snacks for a minimum of 90 minutes per day. The intervention group also will receive the same information on optimal diet and increasing physical activity as the control group. In this 8-week intervention, the primary outcome will be change in body weight, and secondary outcomes will be changes in body mass income (BMI), waist circumference, and blood pressure. The protocol includes 3 clinic visits to assess outcomes: baseline, 4 weeks after randomization, and 8 weeks after randomization. Adherence to the gum chewing protocol will be assessed at clinic visits and during 2 telephone calls at 2 weeks and 6 weeks post-randomization. The investigators' hypothesis is that gum-chewers will lose more weight than those who receive information only.

In this randomized controlled trial of the effects of chewing gum on body weight, we will randomly assign 200 overweight or mildly obese, but otherwise healthy adults (men and women, ages 19 to 50), to one of two groups: 1) a control group, which will receive printed information on optimal diet and increasing physical activity only, or 2) an intervention group, in which participants will be instructed to chew gum following meals and in place of snacks for a minimum of 90 minutes per day, in addition to receiving the same information on optimal diet and increasing physical activity as the control group. In this 8-week intervention, the primary outcome will be change in body weight, and secondary outcomes will be changes in body mass income (BMI), waist circumference, and blood pressure. Outcome measures will be assessed in both groups via clinic visits at baseline, 4 weeks post-randomization, and 8 weeks post-randomization. Adherence to the gum chewing protocol will be assessed at the clinic visits, as well as during telephone contacts at 2 weeks and 6 weeks post-randomization. The effects of the chewing gum intervention will be assessed by analysis of covariance (ANCOVA), wherein treatment assignment is the independent variable; the outcome measures described above will serve as dependent variables; and pre-randomization factors such as age, sex, and baseline BMI will be used as covariates. Our hypothesis is that those randomized to the intervention group will lowe more weight than those randomized to the control group.

Control participants will receive only a nutrition brochure, Finding Your Way to a Healthier You, based on a USDHHS/USDA publication, Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2005.

Behavioral: nutrition brochure

one-time at baseline visit

Other Name: Finding Your Way to a Healthier You (GPO 001-000-04718-3)

Experimental: Chewing gum + nutrition brochure

Participants in the experimental arm will be instructed to incorporate gum chewing in their diet with a goal of at least 90 minutes per day. The schedule is 20 minutes each after breakfast, lunch and dinner plus 10 minutes mid-morning, mid-afternoon and 1 to 2 hours after dinner. Experimental participants also will be told to chew gum instead of unplanned eating in response to hunger, cravings, preoccupation with eating, or negative feelings.

Other: Extra sugar-free chewing gum sticks

90 minutes chewing per day after meals; mid-morning and mid-afternoon; 1 to 2 hours after dinner; and in response to hunger, cravings, preoccupation with eating, or negative feelings in general throughout the day.

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History of prior surgical procedure for weight control or liposuction.

Unable or unwilling to give informed consent; unable to communicate with clinic staff; another household member is a participant or staff member in the trial; unwilling to accept randomization; current or anticipated participation in another intervention research project that would interfere with the intervention offered in the trial; likely to move away before trial completed; unable to walk 0.25 mile in 10 minutes.

Currently pregnant or < 3 months post partum; currently nursing or within 6 weeks of having completed nursing; pregnancy anticipated during study; unwilling to report possible or confirmed pregnancies promptly during the trial; unwilling to take adequate contraceptive measures if potentially fertile.

Any active use of illegal or illicit drugs or history of such use < 12 months. Excessive alcohol intake, acute or chronic: average consumption of 3+ alcohol containing beverages daily; consumption of 7+ alcoholic beverages within a 24-hr period <12 months; or other evidence available to clinic staff. Subject may still be considered eligible if, upon explanation, the clinic staff believe that the volunteer can and will limit future intake.